My great-grandfather John Everett Fee (age 9) and his younger brother, William Thomas (age 7), in 1887.
While I have long looked up individuals in city directories, I have usually just focused on one person in a very specific time period. I’m usually looking for verification of something I already ‘know’. This time I was trying to solve several mysteries related to the Fee branch of my family tree. So I spent several hours digging through Lovell‘s Montreal city directories.
First, I wondered if I could determine when exactly the Fees arrived in Montreal. I know Thomas Fee (ca1816-1897) arrived in Canada around 1837 and settled in St. Malachie, Quebec. He and his family appeared on the 1871 census in Montreal, but I wanted to see if I could figure out when between 1861 and 1871 they moved to Montreal.
Second, I knew Thomas’ son John and his family had headed south of the border for a period of time around 1880. I hoped to figure out a more exact time period for that event.
Finally, I wondered when John’s son John Everett started working as a machinist and whether he took over the same workshop his father had owned/rented, (assuming of course his father (also a machinist) had owned/rented a workshop).
So, I put aside finishing my biography of John Everett Fee and started digging through the Montreal city directories.
I found a Thomas Fee in the 1869-70 Lovell’s city directory. He is listed as a moulder living at 182 Seigneurs. In the next two directories he is a night watchman. I am not 100% positive this is *my* Thomas Fee but it appears probable as in the 1873-74 directory he apears as a clerk at 182 Seigneuers and John Fee, machinist, is down the street at 261 Seigneurs.
My first new discovery was in the 1874-75 directory where, in addition to John Fee, 34 St. Martin, there is an ad:
By 1876-77, Fee & Glennon is no more and Glennon is no longer in the Montreal city directory. Both Thomas and John Fee are missing from the 1877-78, 1878-79 and 1879-80 directories. Thomas reappears in the 1880-81 directory as a clerk at 430 Richmond, but after that is is gone permanently. If he is, in fact, the ‘right’ Thomas, he would be in his mid-60s and possibly no longer working.Â
John reappears in 1886-87 as a machinist at 107 1/2 Bleury. There are several address changes over the years and by 1899-90 his business is located at 623 Lagauchetiere. In 1906-07, John‘s shop is located at 107 Lagauchetiere W and his home is 377 Grosvenor in Westmount.
From 1906-07 until 1914-15, that information remains constant. In 1914-15, we finally find Fee JE, machinist, 202 Prudhomme av. John Everett moved to 216 av Girouard in 1916-17, and his occupation remained machinist until 1919-20 when he was listed as an elv eng (elevator engineer). By 1921-22, the listings read:
Fee JE of John & JE Fee 226 Av Girouard
  “ John of John & JE Fee 377 Grosvenor av Westmount
  “ John & JE , machinists, 107 Lagaughtiere W
The listing was exactly the same in 1922-23. John Sr. passed away in 1922 and in 1923-24 we find the listing for Fee JE, mach, 107 Lagauchetiere W h 226 Av Girouard. This stays the same until 1928-29 when the work address changes to 157 Lagauchetiere. By 1931-32, his home address is 4390 Wilson av and changes again in 1935-36 to apt 11, 1830 Lincoln av. That stays the same until the 1954 directory when he no longer has a business address listed. As he was in his mid-70s at that point, it is likely that he retired. He and his wife moved to apt 1 6254 Sher W in 1959 and he passed away in 1967.
So, did I find answers to any of my questions? It would appear that, providing that actually is the ‘right’ Thomas Fee, he and his family arrived in Montreal around 1868/69, in time to be listed in the 1869-70 directory.
I know that John Everett was born in Montreal in 1878. The fact his father isn’t listed in the 1877-78 directory suggests that, perhaps, John Sr. headed south before the rest of the family. It would appear that they were back in Montreal by 1885/86, in time for the 1886-87 directory. So, while not precise, it does narrow down the timeline somewhat.Â
Finally, it looks like John Everett enjoyed a rather prolonged youth – we know he was an amateur boxer, rode century bicycle races and was an avid outdoorsmen. He was married in 1913 and his first child was born in 1915, the same year he was listed in the directory as a machinist. What he was doing for employment prior to that is unclear, although he was listed as a machinist in the 1911 census. It is clear, however, that he took over his father’s business location after John, Sr., passed away. At least one mystery has been solved!
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As a brand new geneablogger, I have never before participated in a Carnival of Genalogy. As there is a first time for everything, I thought I’d start with this one! The topic this time around is: My genealogy research/writing plan for 2011. I have never really planned my research in advance before. It’s usually been a pretty hit and miss approach based on when I had the time and the inclination to do some work. That’s part of the reason I started this blog – I thought it would compel me to actually keep doing research, no matter how slowly. I felt the blog would give me a general direction, hopefully laying out a research/writing plan will give me a more detailed roadmap.Â
In essence, my genealogy research/writing plan for 2011 is very simple. To do some – any – genealogy.
Some background: first and foremost, I am a mom to two small children – the preschooler and the baby. I spend most of my days chasing around after them and many of my evenings getting household chores done or sitting in a vegetative state on the sofa.
Second, I am a librarian. Due to the baby, I am currently on maternity leave, which here in Canada lasts for one year. It seems like a long time until you realize the baby is already almost a year old. Consequently, I’ll be going back to work quite soon. While my job involves a great deal of Internet searching and hours of research, pretty much none of it involves genealogy in any shape or form. And when it (rarely) touches on something approximating genealogy, it is certainly not my own!
For these two reasons, any genealogy I actually accomplish in 2011 will be a success story.
That said, I do have some goals for 2011. Whether or not I can realistically accomplish them will be better determined once I’m back at work.
First, I would like to finish going through all of the research I have already completed over the years and work on writing up my mini-biographies on each direct ancestor. While there are times I am positive my bios are of interest to no one but myself, they are helping me to see where exactly the gaps in my research are and are illuminating patterns and other interesting facts that I had previously overlooked. I have completed mini-biographies for my Salter, Davey, Coulman and Fee ancestors and I hope to start systematically moving through the other branches.
In the hopes of maintaining some semblance of order, I am assigning each month a set of ancestors. I will begin in January by working on my Anstead branch.
February – Burton
March – Hunter
April – Lusty
May – Haight
June – St. John
July – Thomas
August – Hindle
September – Oakley
October – Johnson
November – Summerville
December – Barker & Richardson
We’ll see how far I actually get!
Second, I hope to tackle one or two of the brick walls that are currently standing in my way. Thomas Fee, Reuben Thomas, Harrison Haight and Robert Hunter have confounded me for years. I have a fair amount of information on each of them but not enough to carry their lines further back or to be positive about some of the information I do have. I hope that in the course of writing my mini-bios I will either come across new information, or forgotten details, or facts that now makes sense that didn’t previously. And, if not, I hope that I have time to dig around for fresh information.
Third, I have names and at least partial dates for all of my great-great grandparents. My final goal for 2011 will be to try and fill in what holes I have in my information for my them and try to take all my branches back another generation for those great-great-great grandparents I don’t yet have details for. I expect that I will not fully achieve this goal due primarily to time limitations.
So, that is what I hope to accomplish in 2011. They are, on reflection, fairly lofty goals. Even if I only achieve a fraction of them, however, I will consider it time well spent.
Happy New Year! Best wishes to all for a happy and healthy 2011!
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My great-grandfather John Everett Fee cycled centuries in the early part of the 1900s.
I can’t imagine cycling 100 miles in one day with today’s technology. This picture was taken in 1913.
Posted in Fee | Tagged Photographs | 1 Comment »
I was recently honoured by not one but two Ancestor Approved awards. Both Linda from Documenting the Details and Joy from Tomorrow’s Memories were kind enough to acknowledge my blog. Recipients of this award (which originated at Ancestors Live Here) are to list ten things they have learned about any of their ancestors that have surprised, humbled or enlightened them. Award recipients are also to pass the award along to ten other bloggers who they feel are doing their ancestors proud.
I have finally completed my list, but it will take somewhat longer to come up with ten blogs, as many have already received this award. So, without further ado, I present my list:
1. I think one of the things that has surprised me the most is the fact I have had an easier time tracing many of the women in my tree rather than the men. When I started researching, I assumed it would be easier to track the men since they tend to lead more “public†lives. That has not held true in all cases.
2. I am humbled by those same women. Many of my ancestors had very large families of 10 or 12 children. I am struggling to manage with two and I am in awe of how they managed to not only birth that many children but, in some cases, move to a new country with them and raise them in ‘the bush’.
3. I have found it enlightening and somewhat surprising just how much travelling my ancestors did. I had a vision of a one-way trip to Canada, finding a home and then staying there. Many of my ancestors moved around a lot more than that, either within the province they emigrated to or across the border to the US and back.
4. I was surprised to discover that many of those in my father’s mother’s family were actually quite well-to-do. Most of the family I have uncovered in my other three branches were farmers or servants or workers of some sort. Through some of my grandmother’s papers and with some digging, I have discovered prosperous traders in London, wealthy farmers in Norfolk and even a story about an invitation to tea with Queen Victoria.
5. I was surprised to find that one of my great-great grandfathers was married three times. All of his wives were named Mary.
6. I am not exactly surprised, but definitely intrigued, that many of the stories that were passed down about my ancestors have turned out to have an element of truth to them.
7. I have found it enlightening to discover how similar we are to those who went before us. Often professions have travelled down family lines or you can see where someone’s mechanical prowess, for example, came from. It’s also interesting to see old pictures and note the similarities to those living today. (My younger child is the spitting image of my grandmother at the same age.)
8. I am humbled by the thought of how many ‘coincidences’ and twists of fate had to take place for ‘this person’ to meet ‘that person’ and marry and have children and eventually lead all the way to me. It’s really rather remarkable watching that dance through time and space.
9. As a relatively recent parent, I am humbled by how many of my ancestors lost children and yet carried on. Some of them lost several in a short time span and while mere dates and names can’t tell of the pain of the loss, I can only assume they possessed great strength in continuing on. The loss of a child was perhaps more common in those times, but I can’t imagine it was any less difficult.
10. I am surprised – though not very – at how much fun it is to go digging through history to see what I can turn up next!
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Prompt: What songs did your family listen to during Christmas? Did you ever go carolling? Did you have a favorite song?
We used to listen Christmas music through much of the month of December. There were the more ‘religious’ songs – Silent Night, Hark the Herald Angels Sing, Away in a Manger – and the more ‘secular’ ones – Jingle Bells, Santa Claus is Coming, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. We listened to albums, mostly, although I am sure there was a fair bit of singing, too. Today, I try to sing Christmas carols but the preschooler tends to tell me to keep quiet. It’s ok if the preschooler is singing, but it’s not ok for me to sing along!
I went carolling exactly once. I was in my late teens/early twenties and was involved with a youth group. We went out on a snowy winter evening and sang at several houses in the neighbourhood. I don’t remember much more than the fact it was pretty cold!
My favourites when I was younger are similar to my favourites now. I have always liked We Three Kings, O Holy Night and Do You Hear What I Hear? I tend towards the more traditional, apparently.
Excerpt from Where the Saints Have Trod, Judith St. John, 1974 (Oxford University Press). The book is based on the author’s childhood memories (ca 1914-1924). She was my great-aunt.
“ “What will be the first Christmas hymn we sing this year?†my father asked. We always sang a hymn after supper. We didn’t sing church Christmas carols like “Hark! The herald angels sing†or “Joy to the worldâ€, nor Sunday School carols like “We three kings†and “Once in royal David’s cityâ€; we sang very private Christmas hymns my mother taught us that no one else in Lukefield knew.
“ “Let’s sing “Once a little Baby lay, Cradled in the fragrant hayâ€.†It was always my mother’s favourite. It was good to hear it once again. It had lain quietly in my mind for eleven long months.
“ “What Santa Claus piece shall we sing?†said mother. It was difficult to choose. We were all quiet for a moment, remembering old favourites.
“ “I’ll choose, “Santa Claus will come tonight, if you’re goodâ€,†I said. I liked the motions we used while we lustily sang that song. When it was over we played: “What would you like for Christmasâ€. We each had a turn to give a heart’s desire. “A toy typewriter,†I said. “A fur muff,†said Elizabeth. “Roget’s Thesaurus,†said my father. “A feather boa,†said mother. We were all ready and waiting with longed-for treasures.â€
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John Fee was the eldest son of Thomas Fee and Charlotte Williams. Family records indicate he was born in September 1844 and I have found an index for his baptism in 1845.
John (7) was listed in the 1851 census along with his parents Thomas (35) and Charlotte (32) in St. Malachie, QC. In the 1861 census John (16) is living with his parents in St. Malachie.
In 1872 John married Henrietta Salter. I have yet to find a record of the marriage.
In 1880 the family was living in Plattsburgh, Clinton County, New York. John (34) is a machinist while Henrietta (33) is keeping house. Their children at that time included Mildred (6), and John (2).
By the 1891 census, the family is back in Montreal. John (44) is still a machinist and Henrietta (42) is presumably still keeping house. Their children include Mildred (16), John (13), William (10) and Ruth (6). According to the census William and Ruth were born in the United States, which suggests the family returned to Canada sometime between 1885 and 1891.
I have yet to find the family in the 1901 census, but the 1911 census shows the family still living in Montreal, at 377 Grosvenor. John (66) is listed as a machinist as is son John (33). Also at home with John and Henrietta (65) are William (30) and Ruth (26). Mildred (now Newmark, 36) appears to be back living with the family along with her children Basil (16), Henry (14) and Grace (8).
John Fee died on October 8, 1922.
John and Henrietta Fee, 1921, 49th anniversary
Posted in Fee | Tagged Census data, Photographs | Leave a Comment »
Prompt: Did your family attend religious services during the Christmas season? What were the customs and traditions involved?
As a young child we attended church fairly regularly and went to church during the Christmas season. I don’t actually remember any sort of pageants or much at all about the services from way back then. We did have our school Christmas concerts in the local United Church and I remember those much better.
When I was older, we went to church much less regularly but at some point we did start going to the Christmas Eve evening service. These were usually held around 10 or 11pm on Christmas Eve. My favourite services were always the candlelit ones. A dimly lit church and beautiful music makes for a wonderful Christmas tradition. Having very young children, however, has taken the Christmas Eve service out of my usual Christmas traditions for the time being.
This year, however, we did get a bit of “church†at Christmas. The baby was baptized on Sunday. In addition to the baptism – there were three babies being baptized this time – the service included a rather unique Christmas pageant with plenty of audience participation. I don’t think I really got the full impact of the service as I was holding a squirmy baby and trying to keep a preschooler under control. The baby behaved beautifully, the preschooler spent part of the service running around the church with a cousin. Not exactly the service of my dreams but the music was pretty good!!
Excerpt from Where the Saints Have Trod, Judith St. John, 1974 (Oxford University Press). The book is based on the author’s childhood memories (ca 1914-1924). She was my great-aunt.
 “Christmas Sunday was a joyous, holy day. In the afternoon, my mother told the Christmas Story to the whole Sunday School. She drew on the big blackboard the quiet town of Nazareth, and Joseph’s house with the flat roof, where the angel visited Mary. She drew the long, weary road to Bethlehem. With a few strokes of the chalk, she pictured the shepherds and the angelic, heavenly host. Away down in the corner, she drew the camels and Wise Men who were journeying to worship the Christ Child in the manger. It seemed to me that we were really in the Holy Land, that those crude figures were alive and breathing, and that we went with them to the stable. My mother could make stories seem more real than real living.â€
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Prompt: How did your family handle Christmas Shopping? Did anyone finish early or did anyone start on Christmas Eve?
When I was a child, my mother did the bulk of the Christmas shopping to ensure us kids and my father had presents and filled stockings. Early on, my father would be the only one buying for my mother, but as I got older I started to buy things both for my parents and my sibling. We usually made lists for each other to provide guidance, but it wasn’t mandatory to actually follow the list if you came across something ‘better’. Some years, if we hadn’t had a list some of us might not have had any presents. We still do lists but they seem much harder to create than they used to – fewer toys, I guess, though more expensive ones! The logistics of ensuring there isn’t duplication off the list also makes things challenging – there’s a lot of email and secretive phone calls leading up to Christmas.
No one finished particularly early most years – although every year I continue to hope I’ll be done well ahead of schedule. And every year I’m usually in the mall buying something or another a day or two before Christmas. This year will be no exception. Thanks to the Internet, however, I haven’t been in the mall quite as much as usual prior to the last couple of days!
Excerpt from Where the Saints Have Trod, Judith St. John, 1974 (Oxford University Press). The book is based on the author’s childhood memories (ca 1914-1924). She was my great-aunt.
“In secret places, we began to make presents. Elizabeth embarked on the ambitious task of knitting a dish-cloth for Mother, out of string. I decided to knit her a table-napkin ring. I found a little ball of rose wool for the purpose. I made a book-mark for Aunt Rhoda, and a calendar for my father to hang in the barn. He had never had one there. I went shopping for Elizabeth’s present – a fat scribbler that she could use for a scrap-book. In the same store, I bought a tiny silver container full of coloured leads for my brother’s eversharp pencil.”
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Prompt: Did you have one? Where did you hang it? What did you get in it? Do you have any Christmas stockings used by your ancestors?
My mother had handmade all of our stockings. They were red with a white band at the top with our names written on in green. She had not made one for herself. Hers was store-bought with a picture of Santa Claus on it. As we added partners and grandchildren to the mix, my mother made them their own stockings and has since replaced our old ones. She herself still uses her old stocking.
I grew up in a house without a fireplace so we couldn’t really hang our stockings in the more traditional manner. So, for as long as I can remember, we laid the stockings over various chairs in the living room. When we moved, our new house had a fireplace but we tended to have the Christmas tree in a different room so the placing of the stockings continued. Even today, in my own home, we will probably not actually hang the stockings because our fireplace is again in a different room from the tree. When we come down in the morning, Santa has filled the stockings and left them on ‘our’ chairs.
We always had an orange in the toe of the stocking and a candy cane hanging over the edge of the top of the stocking. What was in between varied from year to year, but there were usually socks and a toothbrush and other assorted ‘necessities’. Then there was the ‘fun stuff’ – candy, chocolate, little toys, a stuffed animal. And that’s pretty much how Santa handles stockings today – there are always some practical items as well as some fun stuff.
Excerpt from Where the Saints Have Trod, Judith St. John, 1974 (Oxford University Press). The book is based on the author’s childhood memories (ca 1914-1924). She was my great-aunt.
“We hung up no ordinary stockings on Christmas Eve, but special bright blue knitted stockings that had belonged to an ancestor who died before my mother was born. He must have been a giant, for those stockings were so long that they almost touched the floor when we hung them on the mantel. They were always kept in the Christmas truck with the decorations.â€
“It was still dark when the alarm sounded. It was morning. “Merry Christmas, Merry Christmas.†Everyone shouted the greeting as loudly as possible. In a twinkling, my brother, Elizabeth and I were racing downstairs to our stockings. I let the others go first in case Santa Claus had not found us in the new parish. But he had come all right! Our stockings were bulging. The tree looked like a fairyland tree in the faint light.
“ “He found us. He found us.†We all climbed on to the big bed in my mother and father’s room. Aunt Rhoda came, too, wrapped in a blanket. The things in our stockings were a great surprise to everyone. A red candy apple, a little candy donkey, a toy watch, a puzzle, nuts, raisins, candy, figs, dates, a shining apple, and in the toe, a fat, bouncing orange. When all our treasures had been unpacked, we sang our jolliest Christmas songs, beginning with “Merry, merry, merry, merry Christmas bellsâ€. I thought Santa Claus had never been so generous.â€
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